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comment by wasoxygen
wasoxygen  ·  1540 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Social Cooling

“Do you check your smart phone before you pee in the morning or while you pee in the morning? ’Cause those are the only two choices.”

Line from Roger McNamee in “The Social Dilemma.”

Someone pointed out that Facebook doesn’t sell user data, that’s the family jewels which they carefully guard, instead selling the opportunity to advertise to curated demographics.

What behavior do you want to discourage? Would you want to block Mazda from running ads before car videos on YouTube rather than Mickey Mouse videos?





mk  ·  1540 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    Someone pointed out that Facebook doesn’t sell user data, that’s the family jewels which they carefully guard, instead selling the opportunity to advertise to curated demographics.

They do track you around the web, and through your phone quite aggressively, however. They guard the actual data, but sell the use of it causally.

    Would you want to block Mazda from running ads before car videos on YouTube rather than Mickey Mouse videos?

Absolutely. First, I want to see a world that isn't warped by predictions of my behavior, and second, for the minuscule value of seeing a Mazda ad over a Mickey Mouse one (which on the whole, in my experience has been zero or negative), I'd rather have the privacy.

If I am searching for car videos, take a chance and show me a car ad over a Mickey Mouse ad.

wasoxygen  ·  1540 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I think we should be careful about thinking that advertising is annoying like mosquitoes, and anything we do to make life harder for mosquitoes makes life better for us, so we should similarly make advertising harder.

Advertising is mostly wasteful; probably very few purchase decisions are altered by ads. Yet advertisers have a high tolerance for this waste. If we make it harder for advertisers to find their targets, the result could be a much larger volume of less discriminate advertising.

Suppose Mazda USA wants to advertise to potential customers in North America, but 90% of the online audience is outside North America. Do you have a preference between seeing ten times as many ads versus YouTube geolocating your IP address into continental sectors? Consider that YouTube already provides faster service by caching content on a geographically nearby content delivery network.

cgod  ·  1540 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Advertising is motive force that is ruining everything.

It's why we think buying more things might finally make us happy. Consuming our way to a destroyed earth and an insatiable apatite that can never be sated. The essential trick is to make you feel like you aren't good enough and things can make you happier, thinner, prettier, smarter ect.

It's why my healthy nine year old thinks she is fat.

It's why our news panders to the extremes, pushing us further and further from each other. Shock and outrage sells more tooth paste and cars.

wasoxygen  ·  1539 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I don't think that buying more things will improve my baseline happiness, but I do get pleasure from my consumer behavior. Today's consumerist society comes with costs, but stress and insecurity aren't new, and maybe not a bad tradeoff for the agricultural lifestyle we left behind. Communes are out there for people who get bored with their four hours of daily television.

I'm just trying to find out what would make mk happy. He doesn't want Facebook to sell user data, but when the documentary says they don't sell data, he expresses concern about gathering data.

He says it's okay if someone searching for "stem cell storage" sees an ad for Forever Labs, but if they search for "Wankel engine" and land on a car video, Mazda should "absolutely" be blocked from showing an ad with that video (though his next sentence seems to say the reverse).

My point is not that privacy is worthless, but that Mazda's desire to sell cars will not be reduced by making it harder for them to find customers. They will adjust to controls on targeted advertising, perhaps with larger and less discriminating campaigns. That means more demand for ads, and more revenue and influence for Facebook.

mk  ·  1537 days ago  ·  link  ·  
mk  ·  1538 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    He doesn't want Facebook to sell user data, but when the documentary says they don't sell data, he expresses concern about gathering data.

Facebook gathers the data not just on their platform, but by tracking you elsewhere. Also, Facebook sells the use of the data for marketing.

    He says it's okay if someone searching for "stem cell storage" sees an ad for Forever Labs, but if they search for "Wankel engine" and land on a car video, Mazda should "absolutely" be blocked from showing an ad with that video (though his next sentence seems to say the reverse).

I am fine with presenting ads next to search terms. I am not ok with marketing based upon a profile that is built for me. I am less ok with it if it is shared between companies, and even less so if it is created by tracking my behavior.

It is ok if Mazda has to work harder to sell cars or if Forever Labs has to work harder to sell stem cell banking. That's how advertising worked for more than a century. It won't mean more revenue for Facebook, as it will mean a lower ROI on their ad service.

kleinbl00  ·  1540 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I would like to block Cozy Bear from running "Joe Biden drinks baby blood with Ghislane Maxwell" ads before "Sandy Hook was Crisis Actors" videos. They can't do this on TV because there's legislation preventing them from doing so.

As currently written, broadcasters are culpable for defamatory and slanderous content while social media networks are not. What is your argument for this dichotomy to persist?